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Insurgent Youth
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15 September 2026

This history of the Sandinista student movement is a window into the cultural milieu that produced a revolution where it seemed least likely to occur: among the youth of a country under the firm grip of a US-backed dictatorship whose power was secured by one of the best armed and most highly trained military forces in the region. By examining the articulation of political, gendered, and age-specific identities within the revolutionary process, Insurgent Youth sheds light on the everyday struggles of young Nicaraguans.
In the early 1970s a new emphasis on personal freedom and pleasure, under the influence of a global counterculture, challenged Sandinista gender ideology, especially masculinity, from within. This shift transformed the social world of Nicaraguan youth in general and Sandinista students in particular, eventually affecting the character of clandestine struggle and debates over revolutionary praxis within the Sandinista National Liberation Front (FSLN). Insurgent Youthshows how this new youth identity, which included the classic 1960s triumvirate of “sex, drugs, and rock ‘n’ roll,” constituted a social vernacular among young Nicaraguans of all classes—a common language and array of social practices that ultimately aided FSLN recruitment efforts among working-class youth. At the same time, this new identity posed a danger to the movement in that it embodied a tacit questioning of both mainstream and Sandinista notions of gender and the political, bringing threatening class and ideological contradictions present within the movement to the surface.
Insurgent Youth places what was happening in Nicaragua into the context of the worldwide student movement, challenging patriarchy and colonialism in Latin America and across the globe. This deep dive into the Nicaraguan revolution and the youth culture surrounding it provides a unique perspective on, and understanding of, modern Latin American history.
This book is a first and fresh contribution in the construction of a new look at the Central American revolutionary movements. By contextualizing the formation of the Sandinista revolutionary political culture within the overall framework of the global emergence of the New Left, the book joins an emerging stream of works that are addressing the flows of symbolic and material interaction between the revolutionary movements of different latitudes.”
—Alberto Martín Alvarez, Universitat de Girona
Francisco J. Barbosa was professor of Latin American history at the University of Colorado Boulder and Metropolitan State University of Denver. His approach to Central American history was shaped by his family experiences and life as a Nicaraguan immigrant growing up in Los Angeles. He was the recipient of a Bernardo F. Mendel Dissertation Research Fellowship, the Indiana University Latin American Fellowship, a Tinker Foundation Field Research Grant, and the CSU Los Angeles Alumni Certificate of Honor and was the CSMP/Lausanne Graduate Fellow at Willamette University from 2003 to 2005.